EIGHTY-FOUR

The smell of dust and creosote and rotting wood filled the tunnel, the air dank and rancid. Marisol's ribs ached and her skull throbbed. Springy cobwebs stuck to her face, feeling like desiccated fingers of corpses. Fractured beams-ancient railroad ties-sagged under the weight of the earth above her. The splintered plywood roof leaked funnels of dirt.

She scrambled barefoot through the tunnel, hunched over to keep from hitting her head on the drooping beams. Fearing the worst. The tunnel a dead end or an endless maze.

She followed the beam of the flashlight, one hand running along the side of the tunnel, rough and jagged to the touch. From somewhere, water dripped.

She stumbled into a puddle, the splash as loud as a whale breaching. The cold water startled her.

Another frightening thought. The guard, knife drawn, could be following her.

She clicked off the flashlight, blinked against the darkness, and listened for footsteps. Only the drip she had heard before, but in the confined space, magnified into watery explosions. She turned the beam back on and continued deeper into the tunnel. Without warning, her right knee buckled, and she toppled into a hole, bracing herself with one arm. Pain shot through her wrist, and something sharp pierced her hand, which immediately started to bleed. It felt as if she'd fallen on a railroad spike or a piece of sharpened bamboo.

She scrambled to her feet, tore off a piece of her dress, and made a bandage, stopping the blood flow. Aimed the flashlight into the hole. What was that? A white, bony… oh, God… rib cage! A human skeleton lodged into the dirt. She had stumbled into a human grave and slashed her hand on a human bone. A woman from the brothel? A customer? Some personal enemy, a long forgotten victim of violence? The horror of a lonely death without prayers.

Who would bless her, Marisol wondered, if she was entombed in this passage to hell?

She played the flashlight across the floor of the tunnel. No other skeletons. No other holes. She picked up the pruning shears, which had fallen from her apron. Then hurried along, bent over, faster now, until she came to an obstruction.

A door! The end of the tunnel.

Old and ornate, with carvings of cherubs. A doorknob of green glass, an antique look.

The door was locked.

Marisol played the flashlight beam around the door frame. Dry-rotted wood. She dug at the frame with the pruning shears. Sawdust dribbled out; the wood crumbled. She freed the lock from its latch and pushed the door open.

A dark room. Cool. A basement. Crates covered by decades of dust. She wiped off a box, checked the stenciled name: Valley Improvement Society. She was in the right place. The building next to the brothel, the place the rich politicians gathered before traveling underground for their pleasure.

A set of stairs. A door open at the top.

She moved cautiously up the stairs, flinching when they groaned under her weight. On the ground floor, an ancient pool table, a long wooden bar with a cracked mirror. More cobwebs, overstuffed furniture draped in dust covers.

A haunted house.

She raced to the front door. The knob turned but the door wouldn't open. She put her shoulder to it. It didn't budge. Shined the light along the door frame.

The door was boarded with wooden planks, nailed from the outside. Pushed again, but the wood held tight. Thick, sturdy nails. No way to force her way out. She fought back tears.

She checked the windows. The glass broken, but two-by-fours crosshatched the openings here, too.

Intended to keep people out, the fortifications trapped her inside.

A noise.

She stood frozen in place.

A car engine.

She moved to one of the windows, peeked out between the boards. A car approached slowly, turning sideways in the driveway. A rack of lights on its roof, a star painted on its side.?La policia!

But she had seen policemen at the brothel. Everyone, it seemed, worked for Rutledge.

The driver's door opened. A man in uniform got out and took several steps toward the building. Backlit by the car's headlight beams, he threw off a shadow ten feet tall. "Marisol! Marisol Perez. You in there?"

She stayed quiet.

"You're safe now, senorita," the man called. "I'm the chief of police."

Why should she trust this man? Except for her father, what man could she trust?

"I'm here to help you."

Help me do what?

The policeman stepped back to the car, opened the rear door, and pulled a boy from the backseat. Her breath caught in her throat.

Could it be?

He was the size of her Agustino, but she could not make out the boy's face.

"Lemme make it easy for you." The policeman's tone had gone hard. "We've got your kid. Give a signal you're in there."

"No! Mami, hide! Run!"

Tino's voice!

The policeman grabbed Tino's neck. "I don't want to hurt anybody."

Tino flailed, tried to twist free. "I'll kill you, cabron." Sounding as if he was choking.

"Let him go!" Marisol screamed, pounding a fist against a window plank. "Let him go! And take me!"

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